As you know, in English and most western languages, we read and write from left to right.
If you are right-handed, you begin on the left-side of a page and write, moving your hand from left to right. As you proceed you can see what you have written and your hand moves mostly in a pulling motion across the page.
However, if you use your left hand (try this), as you write from left to right, your left hand tends to move over and cover the words that you have already written, so that you can’t read them! If you are writing with ink that can smudge, this is an added problem. Your left hand moves across the page in a pushing motion.
In order to be able to see more easily what they are writing, many left-handed children, raise their wrist towards the top of the page, into a hooked position, so that their hand does not cover their writing. This is NOT the best way for a left-hander to write.
Correct procedure for writing left-handed
- To avoid this, a left-handed child needs to be coached from as early as possible, to differentiate between ‘reading position’ and left hand ‘writing position’ of the page/book. Even when colouring in or drawing, a preschool child that uses her left hand should be encouraged to become familiar with this rotated page-orientation.
- Reading position is straight up, the way we normally position a book when we read or write. Left hand writing position requires that the page be rotated clockwise to about 45 degrees (or less), so that the child can write across the page from left to right, seeing what she is writing without having to hook her wrist.
- The degree to which the paper should be rotated will depend on the height of the surface on which the child is writing, as this will affect the elbow position of the child. The amount of rotation needed increases as table height forces the elbows away from the body.
- In this rotated writing position the child must be taught to write or draw with a straight wrist and her elbow and wrist below the writing line, not lifted to the left side or with the wrist raised above the writing. When practicing this, the child should write large letters.
- Experience shows that virtually all left-handed children in kindergarten and primary grades have been coloring in with the page in reading position for years and have developed embedded habits for the orientation of images in reading position. As a result most of them have great difficulty writing and it requires considerable patience and coaching to undo these habits and build the child’s confidence in the new technique. So, if you have a lefty, make sure you coach her correctly from the start, and if you know someone who has a left-handed child, share this information with them!
13 August is Left-handed day – intended to raise awareness about left-handedness.
Famous Left-handers
Prince William /
Marilyn Monroe /
Leonardo da Vinci /
Jimi Hendrix /
Martina Navratilova /
Nicole Kidman /
Ronald Reagan /
George H.W. Bush /
Bill Clinton /
Helen Keller /
Mark Twain /
HG Wells /
Michelangelo /
Raphael /
Tom Cruise /
Matt Dillon /
Goldie Hawn /
Julia Roberts
Extracted from http://www.shirleys-preschool-activities.com/left-hand.html